Karen Caffrey, LPC, JD

Psychotherapy for adults, couples, and groups


      Helping you create a
better life.

 


                                       

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How Does Therapy Help?

Beyond Talk Therapy: Somatic Experiencing

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Karen Caffrey, LPC, JD
639 Park Road
West Hartford, CT 06107
Phone:(860) 313-0039
karen@karencaffrey.com

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Copyright © 2007 Karen Caffrey All Rights Reserved


How Does Therapy Help?

The Gift of Self-Care

If you're reading this, it means you are putting yourself and well-being as a number one priority in your life. Your choice to engage in therapy is the first, and ultimately the most, important healing factor in the therapeutic process. Psychotherapy is a very personal and valuable experience. It is a gift of caring to yourself and the people you care about. It is a prioritizing of your precious time and resources to take action in support of yourself, your health, your needs, and your dreams, whatever they may be.

Benefits Gained from Psychotherapy

The benefits you gain from psychotherapy depend, at least to some extent, on the questions you bring to it. However, below is a listing of the kinds of positive changes that you may experience as a result of your therapy:

  • Recover from debilitating anxiety and depression.
  • Find and create more friendships, and improve existing relationships.
  • Stop blame and fighting in relationships and marriages, learning to communicate in ways that get both parties needs met.
  • Heal wounds created by childhood abuse or neglect.
  • Stop destructive behaviors like addictions.
  • Discover and develop hobbies, interests and passions.
  • Improve work satisfaction, and work more effectively with co-workers and supervisors.
  • Find or create work that is more emotionally and financially rewarding.
  • Become part of supportive civic, religious or spiritual communities.
  • Discover or deepen experiences of spirituality and peace in day today life.

How the Process Works

We function best when our heart, mind, spirit and body are all at peace and "on the same page". The psychotherapy I practice thus addresses "the whole" of your being, including your body, emotions, nervous system, mind and spirit, as concerns in any one (or all) of these areas may be creating difficulties in your life. My therapeutic approach is to individually assess and address your needs in each these different areas. In addition, I focus on your existing strengths and resources and help you to develop new ones, as I believe personal resources are a critical part of both healing and flourishing in life.

Because ours is not a culture that values sensory experience, one common source of difficulty people face is connecting with the vast store of wisdom and experience that is stored in their physical bodies. One unique aspect of how I work is helping you gently connect with your physical sensations and self. Developing this kind of connection provides you with a different kind of understanding of yourself and your life experience, often providing solutions to problems that could not be "figured out" with your mind alone.

Where appropriate, I also incorporate Somatic Experiencing®, in which am currently being trained. This work involves allowing a gradual release of "fight or flight" energy held in the nervous system from past traumas/accidents, etc. Clearing this energy from your nervous system allows you to move forward in your life unburdened by these past incidents. To learn more about Somatic Experiencing®, click here.